Month: April 2021

  • Arts & Culture

    Is an artist obliged to stand up for injustice and inequity?

    The A.R.T. presents Company One’s production, “Hype Man: a break beat play,” which follows three hip-hop artists as they wrestle with these questions from their rehearsal space to the stage and the streets and back again, against a backdrop of racist violence and inequality. It streams at select times through May 6.

    5–7 minutes
    Kadahj Bennett (left) plays Verb, a Black hype man for white rapper Pinnacle, portrayed by Michael Knowlton.
  • Arts & Culture

    Animal encounters on the battlefield

    At Radcliffe, Navy veteran Mackin is at work on his next series, “Animals,” featuring a selection of stories left out of his first collection, many inspired by the animals he came across while on duty with a SEAL team in Afghanistan and Iraq.

    4–6 minutes
    Will Makin.
  • Arts & Culture

    Black identities ‘In the City’

    Black photographers highlight the past and present of the city of St. Louis.

    3–5 minutes
    Child posing on a roof.
  • Campus & Community

    Devah Pager, 46

    At a Meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences on April 6, 2021, the Minute honoring the life and service of the late Devah Pager, Professor of Sociology, was placed upon the records. Pager was renowned for her research on hiring discrimination and the consequences of mass incarceration.

    4–7 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    1,968 total accepted to the Class of 2025 as regular-decision letters go out

    Harvard College has offered admission to 1,223 applicants for the Class of 2025 through its regular-action program, with 1,968 admitted in total, including those selected in the early action process. The total number of applications for the Class of 2025 was 57,435, a marked increase from 40,248 for the Class of 2024.

    5–7 minutes
    Harvard Gate.
  • Science & Tech

    A pain in the tooth

    Odontoblasts have a newly discovered function: sensing cold, which can trigger pain in teeth. But scientists have also found a way to block the pathway to cold-sensitive teeth.

    3–5 minutes
    Man with sensitive teeth eating ice cream.
  • Arts & Culture

    With a wave of the wand

    With a shared love of magic, two students founded the Society of Harvard-Undergraduate Magicians, known by its clever acronym, SHAM.

    4–6 minutes
    Magic show on Zoom.
  • Science & Tech

    How we handle stress at 45 linked to prenatal exposure

    Men and women whose mothers experienced stressful events during pregnancy regulate stress differently in the brain 45 years later, results of a long-term study demonstrate.

    3–4 minutes
    Woman showing signs of stress.
  • Campus & Community

    Harvard journal speaks to publishers’ association

    Harvard Data Science named best new journal in science.

    2–3 minutes
    Science illustration.
  • Arts & Culture

    Foundation names Taraji P. Henson Artist of the Year

    Taraji P. Henson was feted as the 2021 Harvard Foundation’s Artist of the Year.

    3–5 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Retracing steps to anti-Asian racism

    As Asian Americans face random acts of violence, a symposium looks at centuries of entrenched racism, much of which has been fostered, if not engendered, by the media and the fears of white America.

    3–5 minutes
    Makeshift memorial for victims of racial violence.
  • Health

    Approval of at-home tests releases a powerful pandemic-fighting weapon

    FDA approval of two over-the-counter rapid antigen tests promises to transform the testing landscape around COVID-19, lowering cost and giving the certainty of knowing when you’re infected to the individual, a Harvard epidemiologist said.

    3–5 minutes
    Abbott BinaxNOW self test for COVID.
  • Science & Tech

    An itching question

    Insights at the intersection of the nervous, immune systems point to the culprit.

    4–5 minutes
    Person scratching.
  • Arts & Culture

    A feast for the eyes, sort of

    A panel of experts explored the various ways in which the history of food in art tells a story of creativity and craftsmanship during a recent virtual talk sponsored by the Harvard Art Museums and presented in partnership with the Food Literacy Project at Harvard University Dining Services.

    4–6 minutes
    Chocolate Lion.
  • Work & Economy

    Innovation, persisting

    The New Venture Competition features entrepreneurs adapting to challenging times.

    4–6 minutes
    Harvard Business School.
  • Campus & Community

    A table set for two

    Kathy Santoro, director of HR Programs and Operations for the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, remembers time spent with her mother before losing her to COVID-19.

    4–7 minutes
    Kathy Santoro
  • Campus & Community

    Where’s Super Mario?

    Mario Leon picked up the nickname Super Mario as a sign of affection over his lengthy tenure as the warm, helpful building manager at Pforzheimer House.

    2–4 minutes
    Mario Leon
  • Nation & World

    Rallying religious and health leaders to prevent child abuse

    “Faith and Flourishing: Strategies for Preventing and Healing Child Sexual Abuse,” an online symposium on April 8, will bring together survivors, public health experts, and religious leaders from various traditions to explore best practices for confronting and ending such abuse as well as promoting recovery.

    4–6 minutes
    Bible sitting open on log.
  • Health

    Cancer vaccine shows durable immune effects

    Researchers at Harvard Medical School and affiliated institutions have shown that a personalized cancer vaccine that is specific to an individual’s tumor has lasting effects, detecting vaccine-related immune system changes years after the vaccine was given.

    7–11 minutes
    Patrick Ott, Associate Prof of Medicine at HMS and DFCI, stands by the statues of Dana-Farber founder Sidney Farber.
  • Campus & Community

    Navigating the Yard

    Alyssa Goodman’s class in predictive systems took 28 students all over Harvard Yard as they followed the same directions.

    2–4 minutes
    Neil Khurana, '22